| Literature DB >> 15778366 |
Philippe Poussier1, Terri Ning, Trista Murphy, Dominika Dabrowski, Sheela Ramanathan.
Abstract
One of the BB rat diabetes (diabetes mellitus (DM)) susceptibility genes is an Ian5 mutation resulting in premature apoptosis of naive T cells. Impaired differentiation of regulatory T cells has been suggested as one possible mechanism through which this mutation contributes to antipancreatic autoimmunity. Using Ian5 congenic inbred rats (wild-type (non-lyp BB) and mutated (BB)), we assessed the development of BB regulatory CD8(-)4(+)25(+)T cells and their role in the pathogenesis of DM. BB rats have normal numbers of functional CD8(-)4(+)25(+)Foxp3(+) thymocytes. The proportion of CD25(+) cells among CD8(-)4(+) recent thymic emigrants is also normal while it is increased among more mature CD8(-)4(+) T cells. However, BB CD8(-)4(+)25(+)Foxp3(+) thymocytes fail to undergo homeostatic expansion and survive upon transfer to nude BB rats while Foxp3 expression is reduced in mature CD8(-)4(+)25(+) T cells suggesting that these cells are mostly activated cells. Consistent with this interpretation, peripheral BB CD8(-)4(+)25(+) T cells do not suppress anti-TCR-mediated activation of non-lyp BB CD8(-)4(+)25(-) T cells but rather stimulate it. Furthermore, adoptive transfer of unfractionated T cells from diabetic BB donors induces DM in 71% of the recipients while no DM occurred when donor T cells are depleted of CD8(-)4(+)25(+) cells. Adoptive transfer of 10(6) regulatory non-lyp BB CD8(-)4(+)25(+) T cells to young BB rats protects the recipients from DM. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the BB rat Ian5 mutation alters the survival and function of regulatory CD8(-)4(+)25(+) T cells at the post-thymic level, resulting in clonal expansion of diabetogenic T cells among peripheral CD8(-)4(+)25(+) cells.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15778366 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.174.7.4081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422